
C41 vs. E6 differences in chemistry - The Wet Darkroom: Film, …
2008年2月4日 · E6 film is not C41 film without the orange mask. You are missing a lot. The developer types are very different, with different color developing agents, different levels of activity (aka developing strength & speed), too numerous to mention here. You need all of them to get accurate colors and stability of the dyes which won't fade over time.
E-6 film: Completely Clear - Photo.net
2009年9月21日 · However, K-14 then begins exposing the film to different colors of light to reverse the image, red, blue, and finally to a fogging agent in the magenta developer. The silver image will be bleached out after the developers, leaving just clear dye (c, m, y).<br> I know for certain that Kodachrome film in E-6 process comes out blank.
E6 Home processing problems - The Wet Darkroom: Film, Paper
2003年8月4日 · I currently process my own E6 slides at home. I used to do it quite often 10 years ago but have recently returned to my photographic hobby and thus, home E6 processing. Anyway, I have been having a string of processing errors. What is happening is that even though the film is properly loaded into...
processing C-41 color negatives in E-6 - The Wet Darkroom: Film, …
2007年4月7日 · Those are more typical of E6 film cross processed in C41 than the reverse. Are you sure that is not the case? C41 films are what are called 'coupler limited' films which are designed to give very low contrast and long tone scale with very good grain and sharpness. In E6 they are still limited by the amount of coupler and give very low contrast ...
E6 Film Processor such as Jobo CPE-2 - Photo.net
2010年6月9日 · Hello everyone, I am planning on investing in E6 home processing and was wondering as to where I can get hold of an automatic temperature control processor such as the Jobo CPE-2 Plus.<br> They discontinued these in 2006 and I can't even find one on fleabay.
E-6 film processed as B&W? - Photo.net
2009年4月11日 · <p>or you can shoot Ilford XP2 chromogenic (dye-image) "B&W" neg film and run it through E-6 chemistry, which will give a fairly low-contrast, low Dmax positive, often with some color tint.</p> <p>Or you can run C-41 color neg film through E6 chems, for really oddball color positives.</p>
DIY E6 Process - The Wet Darkroom: Film, Paper & Chemistry
2012年1月17日 · When developing in a tank with agitation each 30 second, 6.5 minutes is recommended.<br /> I just developed an e6 film as a positive b&w film.<br /> Using my own developer based on the recipe for the e6 first developer I used 0.6g phenidone, 30g sodium ascorbate, 30g washing soda, 30g sodium sulfite, 1g KBr and some boric acid to get a pH of 9. ...
Black and White positive in e6 questions - Photo.net
2005年7月7日 · The only reason it even works at all is because the E6 bleach-fix is too weak to bleach Ag2S. (Permanganate is strong enough -- I've tried.) Interestingly enough, I found that running this process with E6 film using a D-19 based first dev totally trashed the emulsion. I haven't tried the tin(II) chloride method he describes on his page.
e6 and k14 - The Wet Darkroom: Film, Paper & Chemistry
2005年11月27日 · I don't have any problems with exposure which is demonstrated by my consistent results with E6 film. <p> <i>Processing time is a problem, takes several days here in the good old USA. Current K14 processing is superior to the old "mom and pop" drugstore days though.</i> <p> I never use anything but the best available labs for E6 processing. <p>
So why are all my slides blue?! - The Wet Darkroom: Film, Paper ...
2004年8月30日 · 1. Bad film, either through keeping or manufacturing. 2. Bad processing. 4. Fogged somehow. 5. Tungsten film shot outdoors. If the process or film are bad, then the edges around the frames will also be blue, not black, and the frame marking will differ in color from your normal films of the same general type. Hope that helps. Ron Mowrey